OCR Text |
Show THE SAMPLER Friday, Oct. 24, 1980 r ' . Symmiitl irftih Yi j'- way d mi For 43 minutes October 16, the Dugway Mus- Dugway 28 tangs and the North Summit Braves engaged in some Intermountain 0 of the most evenly played football this side of the Wasatch Mountains. However, there was one Led by Jack Engle and a vaunted ground attack, stretch be- the Mustangs demolished the Intermountain Eagles ginning the second period when the Mustangs 28-- here October 8. couldnt muster up the defensive muscle to stop the 19 tackles along with five Engle had a game-hig- h driving Braves and North Summit won sacks lead defense that had nothing a to quarterback With the loss, Dugway evened their overall re--. short of a field day against' an Eagle offense which cord to 4 while their league mark dipped to netted a mere 90 yards on the ground and 21 in the The Braves used the big play to get themselves air. ahead by six with a little more than six minutes re SUPPORTING the junior was defensive captain maining in the first half, capitalizing on the Mus- Scott Dolle with 10 tackles and one sack along with tangs secondary. Larry White (10 tackles, two sacks), Lennie WilOn third and 10 at their own 41, North Summit liams (eight tackles, four sacks) and Jeff Carter and struck for a pass play and followed it up with John Witkowski with seven tackles, one sack and one conversion pass at the Mustang 19. a fourth-dowfumble recovery apiece. . Two plays later, the Braves found paydirt and Rob Kroff and Eddie Prather also had good games, Dugway began finding it increasingly difficult to do contributing 18 tackles between them. the same. The Eagles came into the game without five of Bouyed by the defense, which quite possibly their starters because of injuries sustained in their played one of its finest games ever, the offense had last outing and a few might have left this contest a three golden opportunities to score fall right in their little more bruised than usual due to Dugway s fierce lap. From here to the end zone, however, was a dif- hitting ferent matter. ENGLE and sophomore sensation Andy Dolle Their first came after Jimmy VanLeeuwen put each had a tremendous hit on the special teams the Braves at their 19 with a punt opening while Kroff teamed with Joe Mohammed, a Tooele the second half. Led by Arturo Ng and Joe MoTranscriptTBulletin Prep of the Week, for a bonehammed, the Mustang defense forced the Braves crushing tackle on an Eagle end around. into a long third down passing situation; and Brad After breaking out of their offensive slump Eva was on the spot to pick it off and return it to the against Altamont, the Mustangs continued to prove Brave 38. the wishbone attacks worth as they chewed up 210 After four downs, the Mustangs punted. yards and forced the Eagles secondary to make a VanLeeuwen returned early in the fourth period good majority of the tackles. to pin North Summit against the wall with a boomJohn Bate topped the attack with 77 yards while ing 52 yarder down to the Brave 8. Witkowski and Williams added 67 and 66 yards, The defense also did some pinning of their own respectively. Bate also added a couple of touchas Ng, Mohammed and Jeff Carter stopped the downs while his backmates contributed one apiece. Braves ground attack and forced a 29 yard punt to THOUGH the Mustangs were able to pound North Summits 37. away at Intermountains middle successfully, it was Dugway, however, couldnt crack the Braves the plays designed to go outside which benefited front wall, netting only seven yards on four succesDugway the most. sive bursts straight ahead. Witkowski ran the reverse for a total of 38 yards VanLeeuwens quarterback keeper to his 25 on while Williams got to the outside on two occasions fourth down kept alive a desperation drive late in for runs worth 31. Bates biggest gainer was a 20 the game. But following John Bates scamper for a the senior did a good deal of on but a yarder sweep seven-yar- d gain and a first down, the quarterback his running after catching passes. threw into a crowd and was picked off at his own 41. He totaled over 1UU yards with his pass catching Though the offense couldnt find the one play to which were mainly delayed screens, and ran one of tie it up, the defense seemingly drew straws in the his receptions back for 63 yards and the Mustangs huddle for their opportunities. third score. Ng, Mohammed, Carter and Lennie Williams DESPITE getting these kind of performances, the ' usually won because whenever the Mustangs needed biggest factor in the game was probably Dugway s a big play, one of the foursome was there. abilty to keep the turnovers at a minimum and the Carter played the run as good as he ever has and penalties near Ng was a terror on the pass, sacking the quarterback In their games against Park City and south Sumthree times, two of them with an assist from Carter. mit, the Mustangs had accumulated 16 turnovers; Williams and Mohammed also turned in stellar performances, but it was the duos aggressive hitting that shined brightest. Eddie Prather complemented both of them with his second-hal- f play at comerback, as he made two Brave drive and unassisted tackles on a well the in run the late game. defensing Like Prather, Carter and the rest of the Mustang defense. North Summit also defensed the run well; and the Mustangs suffered because of it. Bate led the running game with 29 yards followed by Williams five-minu- te 0 ' v. 6-- 0. . , 4-- v 1 , . r...T I ; V ' s ' . ,4 1-- 32-ya- rd j V n , t 36-yar- 1 . 1 f' i i I-- . r ' j I ? 1 H kU t d - --- r ? 3. - - :W Thanks to several Dugway men, this announcing tower concession stand will be in full use next season. Dugway men build tower At all of the Dugway Mustang home football games,1 two things never really change, Mike Riddle and LeRoy Carter sit atop a makeshift announcing tower giving us the play by play while students from the high school sell mun-chialongside the craft shop. Accompanying these endeavors, however, is the sad fact that come es September and October something else never changes: winter weather. When it arrives. Riddle and Carter have to split their time between calling the play by play and chipping ice off their gums. Meanwhile, the students are busy trying to keep their concession stand from making house calls on West Wherry. To win the battle against. the elements, a group of men headed by chief carpenter Jerry Oyler decided to give Dugway a tower which would hold both the broadcasters and the concession stand operators. The group, which included Abe Mohammed, Les Williams, Jim Keetch, Jack Carlson, Bill Peterson, Carter and Riddle, worked Friday mornings and any other time available to finish building the structure in two weeks. Although these men actually did the carpentry work, several organiza tions also had a hand in seeing th project completed. Hie high school and the Self Help store donated the telephone poles which support the tower along with other building materials while Morale Support offered 2 x 4s for siding. Aside from these organizations. Carter said that Dick Huffman, who works at Facilities, was the single biggest influence on the project because he lent the men any tools that were needed. Just recently, the tower was painted. We tried to get this thing off the ground a couple of years ago," recalled Oyler, but we couldnt get the support of a needed organization. So this time, we did it ourselves And everything went exactly according to plan? Well, we did run into a slight problem, added Carter. You see, most of the boards used on the inside are exterior pieces of wood while the outside pieces belong on the inside. But you have to use whats available. For two broadcasters and a group of students, using whats available will now be a pleasure thanks to Jerry, LeRoy, Les, Abe, Jim, Jack, Bill and Mike. . . . six-ya- rd INTERMOUNTAIN put together their best drive, however, on the strength of two fine runs to have first down at the Mustang 42. Dolle and Kroff fired up the defense, though, with two tackles at the line of scrimmage to force Intermountain into a punting situation. For the third time, the Mustangs marched the distance. WITH THE ball at ther 19, beginning the fourth quarter. Bate grabbed a screen pass and weaved his way down to the 48. But penalties pushed them track to the 37 before the senior took off with another pass in the flat and, behind good line blocking, scored. kick put Dugway Bates third straight extra-point up 21-- 0. Behind the guidance of sophomore quarterback Steve Bruce, the Mustangs made their second possession of the quarter a profitable one as they marched 54 yards in seven plays for their final score. AFTER Williams had run nine yards to the Eagle 45, Intermountain was called for unsportmanlike conduct and the ball moved to the 31. Mohammeds two carries put the Mustangs at the 20, but Dugway nearly stood by and watched the as the Eagles were slapped with personal foul and unsportsmanlike conduct penalties to put the ball at the four. Bruce then rolled right and found Witkowski d the defense to close out the scoring. Ire-hin- EJUw lu , i jf--V, ' . rd r a &Li slsV 5W3 Baas Jade Engle jolts JV quarterback Steve Bruce as the Mustangs, under the watchful eye of head coach Steve Larsen, prepare for their season final against Duchesne. and Steve Weidner volunteer countless hours to our youth. weather? MS. IIEIDI DeWitt has organized Well, if youre a dependent youth, you are either passing, catching, groups of cheerleaders with the help of Kim Macher arid Debbie Jones. After weve got the teams organized, we need somebody to scream at when a penalty flag is thrown. Lenny Williams, Bob williams, Eddy Prather and Troy make up the officials corp which has its good and of course bad blocking, tackling or hurdling your body in front of an opposing blocker or tackier. You also could be trying to kick around into a net three times taller than you are, or you could be screaming wildly cm the sidelines for moments, but without, which the your favorite team. game just doesnt get played. The is Ray Zylstra who also WHEN YOU put all these cate- timekeeper contribute much of his free time to gories together you end up with our yourig people. soccer and cheerleaders. HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE 1 ty- candy houses, gift wrapping, wall hangings, baskets, etc. Vote For Your Favorite Tree between Nov. with 23 and John Witkowski with 18. With the run going nowhere fast, the Mustangs went to their passing game late in the first half and the result was their best, and only, drive of the opening 24 minutes. VanLeeuwen hit Witkowski for an gain and moments later connected with Eva for 32 yards down to the Braves 35. Facing a fourth down and two situation, the Mustangs decided to pass. But as VanLeeuwen was backpedaling, the senior slipped in the mud ending the drive. Ironically, the pass was overlooked late in the game when Dugway was near the desperation point. But as coach Steve Larsen explained later, We hadnt had that much success when we threw in the third quarter, so I thought it would be best just to keep it on the ground. 11-ya- - 21-ya- rd er What do you do with beautiful could win $100,001 Koeven will furnish trees and decorations. Groups will choose their decorations from our stock in the order they sign up. Our customers will vote for their favorite trees. Sign up now and start decorating October 271 ing, wreaths, styrofoam third-quart- er By DYA Director Mike Riddle Up Now! Sign Your club, group or organization Demonstrations all day on ribbon non-exista- nt. 10-ya- rd 'Time Oyi OPEN ALL YEAR! TREE DECORATING CONTEST! OCT. 30, 31, NOV. . tonight they Only lost two. Instead, it was the Eagles who were beseeched with first quarter fumbles and a substantial amount of penalties. AFTER lasing their first fumble on a bad handoff only two minutes into the game. Intermountain met Engle in the second quarter; and the junior made an Eagle running back cough up the ball at his own line. Quarterback Jimmy VanLeeuwen worked the option well and took a solid hit before pitching out to Williams, who used every bit of his speed to get into the end zone and give the Mustangs a 6--0 second-quartlead. Engle, Dolle and Kroff made the defensive big plays on the Eagles next series and the Mustangs had it back at their own 33. HELPED by a facemask penalty, and a screen pass to Bate, Dugway scored on their tenth play with Bate, running it in from three yards out to end the first half. To illustrate how overpowering the Mustang offense was, VanLeeuwens first punt came midway through the third quarter after a Mustang drive had been halted. From a defensive standpoint, the seniors punt was also overpowering as it bounced out at the Eagle line. 1 and Dec. 10 Lets Help Each Other Grow. . . llMNMtklMa iMahlltah &UWL GREENHOUSES e 112-74- 9 It seems everyone has an opinion about team sports - good, bad or indifferent. I guess opinions are reflected later in life when observing motivation, discipline or desire to succeed at a given task.Many of these factors are taugfit on the field of competition. The football games have been played on Wednesday evenings. . Scheduling games can be difficult with the adults playing intramural Monday and Tuesday and the High School on either Wednesday, Thurs- day or Friday. However, with the weather holding, its great to see our Dugway has some fantastic young people determined to compete teachers who spend a great deal of of day or time problems. time with our young people. . . Tony regardless Witkowski, Ray Wanlass, Larry Prather, Joe (Sifa) Talakai, Gary Price Nov. 11 Votoirano Day Why not come see for yourself? i Jr I -- r ,, - - 1 . r . . T . .. 7T |